the positive economist susan hayes pdst economics conference

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The Positive Economist Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference Emerging from Emerging from the Boom! the Boom! 2 nd Oct 2010

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The Positive Economist Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference. Emerging from the Boom! 2 nd Oct 2010. Emerging from the Boom!. Charlie McCreevy. A Leader Leading the Masses. Economic Output. Economic output from 1993 to 2000, the average growth of real GNP was 8.3 per cent per year; - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

The Positive Economist Susan Hayes

PDST Economics Conference

Emerging Emerging from the from the Boom!Boom!

2nd Oct 2010

Page 2: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Emerging from the Boom!

Page 3: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Charlie McCreevy

Page 4: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

A Leader Leading the

Masses

Page 5: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference
Page 6: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Economic Output

• Economic output from 1993 to 2000, the average growth

of real GNP was 8.3 per cent per year;

• Debt/GDP ratio was at 29 per cent in 2005

• In 2007, there were 33,000 Irish millionaires

• 50% more in women in the workforce than in 1997

Page 7: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Employment

Employment: total employment rose by 605,500 in the period 1987 to 2001, an increase of over 54 per cent in 14 years

Multinationals accounted for just 10% in 2000

Unemployment saw a trough at 4.5% by the end of 2007

Page 8: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Celtic Tiger

Page 9: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Irish People Queuing to Buy Houses

Page 10: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

“The Dublin housing crisis could probably be ended tomorrow if you replaced every single

person in Dublin with someone else from another part of the world.”

Anthony Sweeney, 1999, European Financial Markets Expert

Page 11: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

“Everything in the world may be endured, except continued prosperity”

Johann Wolfgang von Goethe

Page 12: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Unequal Society

Page 13: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Unequal Society

In 2006, the richest 20% of the working-age population

were earning 12 times as much as the poorest 20 % –

one of the highest levels of income inequality among

any of the 30 OECD countries.

Page 14: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

The UN Poverty Index

The UN Poverty Index in 2002 rated Ireland as having

the highest percentage of poor people in Western

Europe, about 15.3 percent of the country's 3.9

million residents

Page 15: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Dancing on the edge?

Page 16: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

What underpinned Ireland’s economic

growth

• Low corporate taxes

• EU membership and the European internal market;

• Competitiveness;

• Foreign direct investment (FDI); and

• Education and labour supply.

• A time of strong global expansion.

Page 17: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Competitiveness

– Jan 2010: CPI Base 2006 Rate = 100

– August 2010: Goods Base 2001 Rate = 103.4

– Clothing & Footwear (-8.2%)

– Food & Non-Alcoholic Beverages (-3.2%)

– Household Equipment & Routine Household Maintenance

(-4.0%)

Page 18: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Foreign Direct Investment

– OtterBox Announces Plans for EMEA HQ in Cork

(No. 62)

– Intel Corporation announced a 3 year, $1.5million deal Tyndall National Institute, UCC

– Fi-Tek is establishing its European Headquarters in Dublin.

– AOL Global Operations Limited that it is to further expand its Dublin operation

– Google is to create 200 new jobs in a new Operations Centre in Dublin.

 

Page 19: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Employment & The Labour Supply

• Monthly decrease of 5,400 in the Live Register in

September 2010.

• Decrease in 2,600 males and 2,900 females

• Rate of Unemployment is at 13.7%, down from

13.8% in August.

• 91,000 unemployed graduates

Page 20: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Emigration

• Emigration: April 2009/10: 65,300

• Immigration: April 2009/10: 30,800

• Net Outward migration from 7,800 in April 2009 to 34,500 in April 2010.

• Highest level of net outward migration since 1989.

Page 21: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Migration

Page 22: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

A time of strong global

expansion

– ESRI suggest that an increase in world output of 1 per cent in the long run increases the demand for Irish output by around 1.3 per cent

Page 23: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Sure isn’t the world teetering on a double

dip?

• Singapore's its $182 billion economy has already grown 15% this year.

• Thailand’s (GDP) may expand 7.3% to 7.8% in 2010

• Turkey's economy grew 10.3% year-over-year in the second quarter

• In Brazil, nearly two million new jobs were created in the first eight months of this year.

– 3 x the number of jobs created in the United States,

– which has 120 million more residents

– an economy that's five-times larger than that of Brazil

Page 24: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference
Page 25: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Exports – Our Shining Light!

• Exports: €67 billion in 2009 and growing exponentially

• WTO: Ireland ranks the 9th largest commercial

services exporting nation

• In Ireland it is estimated that only 3.5% of services

businesses do any exporting, which employ only an

estimated 12% of the 843, 000 people employed in

the private sector services.

Page 26: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

• Ridiculous Quangos

• Cosy Cartel on Boards

• Inefficiencies at State Level

What don’t I want any more?

Page 27: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

On Thursday 21st Sept 2010., Ireland's Central Statistics Office said gross domestic product, a broad measure of the value of goods and services produced by the economy, dropped 1.2% from the first three months of the year. Economists had forecast a 0.5% growth rate, which would have extended a brief expansion of the Irish economy that began in the first quarter.

Page 28: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

The Problem of Averages

Page 29: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Three Ways to Measure GDP

• Final Goods Produced

• Value Added

• Income

Page 30: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Breakdown on last quarter’s contraction

• Private consumption fell by 0.2% in the quarter.

• Public consumption contracted by 0.8% in the

quarter.

• Imports grew by 4.5 per cent quarter on quarter

• Fixed capital formation rebounded

• All old news anyway!

Page 31: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Have we money to spend?

• 55,000,000 contributed from Volvo Ocean Race

• 34,000,000 contributed from Oxegen

• 30,000,000 contributed from the Cavan Fleadh Ceoil

• 10,000,000 to the local economy from the National

Ploughing Championships

• Car scrappage scheme: sales of new cars up by 94%

on this month last year!

Page 32: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Why Did I…..

Why did I set up a business in a recession, as opposed to the top of the boom?

www.thepositiveeconomist.com

www.optionstradingireland.com

www.investinginyouth.com

Page 33: The Positive Economist  Susan Hayes PDST Economics Conference

Thank you.....

See you throughout the day!

Thank You........

Susan Hayes